THEN: In 1911, haul and sort pyrotechnic materials near shed #17 (right) of then-six-year-old Hitt Fireworks Co. workers on the hill south of Columbia City, bordered by 37th Avenue South and South Brandon Street. (Museum of History & Industry)NOW: Katie McClure (front left), director of the Rainier Valley Historical Society, leads a tour through Hitt’s Hill Park on Aug. 22. Others are (from left) Tim Burdick, Renee McCarthy, Aurora Marsalis, Jennie Hubbard, Deb Barker, John Bennett, John Maynard and Scott Hubbard. For more info on Hitt Fireworks Co, visit RainierValleyHistoricalSociety.org. (Clay Eals)
Published in The Seattle Times online on Oct. 9, 2025
and in Pacific NW Magazine of the printed Times on Oct. 12, 2025
Explosive legacy underlies Rainier Valley’s serene hilltop park
By Clay Eals
In this age of political pyrotechnics, what could be more welcome than a compact, peaceful park with a trail that winds through tall trees and native plants?
Inside this blufftop preserve we find no evidence, other than its namesake, that it once hosted an anything-but-tranquil fireworks factory that produced flares and explosions seen, heard and renowned the world over.
THEN: Thomas Gabriel Hitt, known as T.G. His family says he was a quiet philanthropist, devoted to his Presbyterian church. (Rainier Valley Historical Society)
We are in the Columbia City neighborhood at Hitt’s Hill Park, named for Thomas Gabriel (T.G.) Hitt (1874-1958). An immigrant chemist from London by way of Victoria, B.C., he parlayed a childhood fascination for things that go boom into an international business based atop Rainier Valley’s highest slope.
In 1905, two years before Columbia City joined Seattle, Hitt Fireworks Co. took shape in what became 26 tarpapered shacks, each hand-numbered in red on galvanized grey signs, and spaced several yards from each other to prevent manufacturing accidents from obliterating the whole lot.
THEN08: As shown on this 1928 map, the tarpapered shacks of Hitt Fireworks Co. were spaced several yards from each other to prevent manufacturing accidents from consuming the whole lot. (Sanborn Map, Seattle Public Library)
A frequent overseas traveler to negotiate deals, Hitt employed up to 200 people on his hill.
THEN: Workers sort and package “Flashcracka” materials in this undated photo. T.G. Hitt developed the “Flashcracka,” an extra-loud firecracker, in 1916. During World War II, he also produced aerial smoke screens used to camouflage the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton. (Rainier Valley Historical Society)
Products ranged from panoramic set pieces for the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition and other prominent fetes around the country to extra-loud “Flashcrackas” and other novelties that fit in the palm of a hand.
THEN: The packaging for Hitt’s “Flashcracka.” Note the warning at bottom: “Do not hold in hand after lighting.” (Rainier Valley Historical Society)
His craftsmanship also bolstered Oscar-winning Hollywood films, in the war scenes of “All Quiet on the Western Front” (1930) and the burning-of-Atlanta sequence of “Gone with the Wind” (1939).
THEN: Filming of war scenes for “All Quiet on the Western Front” (left, 1930) and the burning-of-Atlanta sequence for “Gone with the Wind” (1939), both Oscar-winning best pictures, used Hitt Fireworks Co. set pieces. (Rainier Valley Historical Society)
Not all was safe and sane, however.
Fiery onsite calamities occasionally made banner news, especially when on May 8, 1922, exploding powder killed 17-year-old employee Nora Bailey. One day later, the suicide of a same-aged female friend was attributed to her demise. Angry locals demanded the plant be banned from the city, but the city resisted, providing that Hitt obey fire-marshal regulations.
May 9, 1922, Seattle Times, p22.
The heyday of Hitt, also a perfumer and inkmaker, started fading after his accidental arsenic poisoning in the 1930s, says great-grandson Ray Akers, but family continued the enterprise past his death into the 1970s. The company’s arc paralleled society’s love-hate relationship with fireworks, eventually resulting in Seattle banning their manufacture (and, later, their private use) and business moving abroad.
NOW: Visitors enter Hitt’s Hill Park from its entrance on 37th Avenue South. (Clay Eals)
By century’s end, invasive ivy, blackberries and rats flourished onsite. Locals including Akers fought back plans for dozens of houses to be built on the 3.2-acre parcel. Open-space advocates successfully lobbied the city to make it a park and volunteered muscle and money to transform it into a natural refuge.
Today, the only major noise in the sanctuary comes from periodic jet overflights. The uninitiated would never suspect it once had been home to big bangs and fabricated flash.
WEB EXTRAS
Big thanks to Katie McClure and John Bennettfor their invaluable help with this installment!
To see Clay Eals‘ 360-degree video of the “Now” prospect and compare it with the “Then” photos, and to hear this column read aloud by Clay, check out our Seattle Now & Then 360 version of the column.